“commit suicide, commit grand larceny, commit adultery. Thus, commit does not mean just “do or make” but “do or make something negative.” An ESL student who learns that commit in commit a murder means “to do or perform an action” might attempt to make the following seemingly logical combinations: commit a joke on someone, commit the housework, commit a lie. The problem—a huge problem for nonnative learners—is that commit does not collocate with joke, housework, or lie.”
―
Vocabulary Myths: Applying Second Language Research to Classroom Teaching
Share this quote:
Friends Who Liked This Quote
To see what your friends thought of this quote, please sign up!
0 likes
All Members Who Liked This Quote
None yet!
This Quote Is From
Vocabulary Myths: Applying Second Language Research to Classroom Teaching
by
Keith S. Folse72 ratings, average rating, 5 reviews
Browse By Tag
- love (101912)
- life (80341)
- inspirational (76786)
- humor (44589)
- philosophy (31389)
- inspirational-quotes (29059)
- god (27021)
- truth (24911)
- wisdom (24875)
- romance (24534)
- poetry (23565)
- life-lessons (22792)
- quotes (21200)
- death (20687)
- happiness (19059)
- hope (18741)
- faith (18581)
- inspiration (17800)
- spirituality (15909)
- relationships (15780)
- motivational (15755)
- religion (15479)
- life-quotes (15441)
- love-quotes (15064)
- writing (15020)
- success (14209)
- motivation (13702)
- time (12945)
- motivational-quotes (12231)
- science (12197)